Focus on solutions, not blame

Ask "What can we do to fix this?" rather than "Why did you do that?" — one opens, the other closes.

Why it works

"Why did you do that?" is typically a rhetorical accusation, not a genuine inquiry — children know this and respond defensively. "What can we do to fix this?" invites the child into a joint problem-solving frame, which activates competence and belonging rather than shame and defense. The solution focus also teaches the child a transferable skill: when something goes wrong, the first question is "what can be done?" not "who’s at fault?"

How to do it

  1. After acknowledging the problem, pivot with solution language: "The milk is spilled. What do we do now?"
  2. For bigger issues: "That hurt your brother. What can you do to make it better?"
  3. Let the child generate the solution if possible; coach it toward realistic and reparative if needed.

Evidence

Solution-focused brief therapy research shows that orienting clients toward solutions and competence rather than problems and blame produces better outcomes; applied in educational settings, it predicts faster behavioral improvement. (observational)

Solution-focused research is primarily in therapeutic contexts; generalization to everyday parenting interactions is clinically consistent but not separately studied in naturalistic home settings.

Sources

  • de Shazer, S. (1985). Keys to Solution in Brief Therapy. Norton.

Common mistake

Asking "What can we do?" in a tone that makes clear the question is rhetorical and you’ve already decided — the child will disengage from the "solution" the same way they disengage from imposed rules.

Practice this with IX Coach

IX Coach coaches you on solution-focused language for your most frequent conflict scenarios, including how to genuinely receive the child’s proposed solution even when it’s imperfect.

Start with IX Coach

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